>>2369684Yeah
A pyramid tarp, beaked tarp like the Rayway design, trekkertent stealth or Yama gear ciriform if you really want to save weight. These shed wind better than any tent short of a tunnel. As for draught, get a Chinese inner tent to match yours, or a bivy with solid sides (not necessarily top). Ironically this will be quieter than a tent as there is less fabric-on-fabric to billow and snap around in the wind, and if it's not actually raining you can just crawl in the bivy or pitch the tarp very low on the windward side.
As for noise, I've tried just about every shelter from canvas bell tents to bivies, and you get wind noise in all of them. My best advice is to
1) increase your trust in your shelter not to fly away. get a really wind shedding tent/tarp like the ones I mentioned
2) put in earplugs. Silicon ones are more effective than foam, if you forget them dampened toilet paper or scavenged wool from sheep works too.
3) put spare clothing over your head to further insulate you from the noise. Puffies work wonders for this, just have a breathing hole to minimise condensation. Use your backpack as a strut to keep any loose fabric from whipping your face
This is the cosiest way to sleep while staying ultralight. You just have to adjust your mindset that you'll never really have a cosy cocoon away from the outer world without lugging a very sturdy and hefty tunnel tent like a hilleburg. But a few nights of windy weather and you'll adapt just fine, and for the 50%+ other calm or totally still nights most places get, the ease of lightweight simplicity is a great trade off